The film is arranged into four successive parts. Within each part is an amalgam of interviews, narration and animated sequences.
Part I: Human Nature
The film begins with a brief animated sequence narrated by Jacque Fresco.  He describes his adolescent life and his discontinuation of public  education at the age of 14 to study under his own will. He continues to  express that his radical views developed as a result of experiences  during the Great Depression and World War II. Studying the social  sciences, mechanical and social engineering, architecture among numerous  other fields of study for 75 years have, Fresco states, failed to alter  this initial, radical, disposition, which he continues to outline in  greater detail later in the film.
The discussion turns to human behavior and the nature vs. nurture debate. This portion begins with a small clip with Robert Sapolsky summing up the nature vs. nurture debate  in which he essentially refers to it as a "false dichotomy." After  which he states that "it is virtually impossible to understand how  biology works, outside the context of environment." During which time  the film then goes onto describe that it is neither Nature nor Nurture  that shapes human behavior but both are supposed to influence behavior.  The interviewed pundits state that even with genetic predispositions to  diseases, the expression and manifestation of disease is largely  determined by environmental stressors, including topics such as epigenetics and Gene–environment interactions.  Disease, criminal activity and addictions are also placed in the same  light. One study discussed, showed that newly born babies are more  likely to die if they are not touched. Another study which was  mentioned, claimed to show how stressed women were more likely to have  children with addiction disorders.[citation needed] A reference is made to the unborn children who were in utero during the Dutch famine of 1944.  The "Dutch Famine Birth Cohort Study" is mentioned to have shown that  obesity and other health complications became common problems later in  life, due to prolonged starvation of their mother during pregnancy.  Comparisons are made by sociologists of criminals in different parts of  the world and how different cultures with different values can often  have more peaceful inhabitants. An Anabaptist sect called the Hutterites  are mentioned to have never reported a homicide in any of their  societies. The overall conclusion of Part I is that social environment  and cultural conditioning play a large part in shaping human behavior.
Part II: Social Pathology
The origins of our modern economic paradigm are explored, beginning with John Locke and Adam Smith. In Two Treatises of Government, John Locke lays out the fundamental principles of private ownership of land, labor and capital. In The Wealth of Nations, Adam Smith mentions the invisible hand balancing out supply and demand leading to trade equilibrium. The argument becomes religious as the invisible hand is interpreted as  the hand of God. A critical view of economic theory is made by  questioning the need for private property, money and the inherent  inequality between agents in the system. Also seen critically is the  need for cyclical consumption in order to maintain market share which results in wasted resources. Planned obsolescence  is shown to be another important side-effect of the market system,  where goods are deliberately made defective or not having sufficient  technology in order to maintain a large turnover rate. The economic  paradigm is then termed anti-economy due to these profligate activities.  The above described process of individuals and groups exchanging goods,  labor and capital is mentioned as the market economy.
The other component is the monetary economy. The monetary system  regulates the money supply and interest rates by buying/selling  treasuries. More critical views of the monetary system are explained.  According to Zeitgeist, in the final analysis the current monetary  system can only result in default or hyperinflation. This is because  when money comes into existence it is created by loans at interest. The  existing money supply is only the principal. The interest to pay the  loan that created the money does not exist in the money supply and must  be borrowed repetitively in order to service the debt. Due to this  exponential money supply growth, Zeitgeist predicts the value of money  is eventually destroyed as evidenced by the 96% devaluation of the U.S.  money supply since the Federal Reserve was chartered in 1914 and 80%  devaluation since the U.S. ended the Bretton Woods agreement in 1971.
Part III: Project Earth
As with Zeitgeist: Addendum,  to improve the human condition the film presents a "resource-based  economy" as advocated by Jacque Fresco. The dialogue leads to a train of  thought on how human civilization should start from the beginning.  Imagine an exact copy of Earth somewhere in space: conduct a survey of  the planet, to assess the resource types, locations, quantities, to  satisfy human demands; track the consumption and depletion of resources  to regulate human demands and maintain the condition of the environment;  localize the distribution of resources, to control environmental  impacts and maintain self-sufficiency; place an emphasis on recycling  and the use of public transportation, in order to avoid resource waste.  Through the global application of existing revolutionary technologies in  the manufacturing and distribution sectors, labor and money will  eventually become obsolete; thereby establishing the foundation of a  resource-based economy. Various technologies for improving civilization  under the resource-based economy are described. The city structure will  consist of concentric rings, every ring serving one critical function  necessary for the function of a self-sufficient city: agriculture,  energy production, residents, hospitals, schools, etc. For agriculture,  hydroponics and aeroponics are mentioned as a possible solutions for  food shortages. Maglev trains provide transport for the city residents.  Manufacturing and construction become automated with mechanized  technologies, such as three-dimensional printing and computer-aided manufacturing. Mentioned energy production methods: photovoltaic paint, wind turbines, pressure transducers and geothermal power plants.
Part IV: Rise
The world state of affairs is described in a dire light. The peak oil  phenomenon is seen as a threat to civilization’s progress, potentially  resulting in extinction. A case is presented that pollution,  deforestation, climate change, overpopulation, and warfare are all  created and perpetuated by the socioeconomic system. Various poverty  statistics are shown that suggest a progressive worsening of world  culture. According to the United Nations, currently 18,000 children a day die from starvation. Also according to the UN, global poverty rates have doubled since the 1970s.
The movie closes with a standoff between protesters on the streets of Times Square  in New York City facing off against police in riot gear while in the  midst of global economic depression. People withdraw trillions of  dollars from the world’s central banks, then dump the money at the doors  of the banks. The police stand down. The final scene of the film shows a  partial view of earth from space, followed by a sequence of  superimposed statements; "This is your world", "This is our world", and  "The revolution is now".
Interviewees
Dr. Robert Sapolsky, Dr. Gábor Máté, Richard Wilkinson, Dr. James Gilligan, Dr. John McMurtry, Michael Ruppert, Max Keiser, Dr. Behrokh Khoshnevis, Dr. Adrian Bowyer, Jacque Fresco, Roxanne Meadows, Dr. Colin J. Campbell, and Jeremy J. Gilbert.
Reception
Soon after the film's release, several positive and critical reviews were published by a variety of sources:
- In a review published in the Examiner.com, Davi Barker states that he almost always agrees with exactly half of what Peter Joseph includes in his films. Praising the first two parts of the film, he critiques the last section, Project Earth, by saying that the idea totally ignores the role of state coercion.[citation needed]
- A review in the monthly publication The Socialist Standard criticizes several aspects of the film, suggesting that the analysis of the economic system was shaky, that Karl Marx has already undertaken a more scientific and thorough critique of capitalism, and that a strategy of how to get from our current system to the new system proposed in the film is lacking.
- Fouad Al-Noor in Wessex Scene said that the film has more of a focus on solutions than the previous film. Calling it a modern phenomenon, he noted that while there are controversial elements, he challenged those using labels to describe the film to watch the films first.
- In her article on the Zeitgeist Movement, published in Tablet, Michelle Goldberg felt that the film was silly enough that she suspected at times that the film was a satire about a technological utopia but noted the large following of the movement that produced the film.
- Andreas Exner in Social Innovation Network said, that global cooperation might be useful, even partly necessary, but it cannot and should not rely on people functioning like machines, obeying the allegedly natural constraint of resource management which might be enforced by a scientific steering committee.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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